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comparison(noun)BrE / kəmˈpærɪsn / NAmE / kəmˈpærɪsn / - the process of comparing two or more people or things
- Comparison with other oil-producing countries is extremely interesting.
- I enclose the two plans for comparison.
- The education system bears/stands no comparison with(= is not as good as) that in many Asian countries.
- For Durkheim, comparison was the most important method of analysis in sociology.
- an occasion when two or more people or things are compared
- a comparison of the rail systems in Britain and France
- a comparison of men’s salaries with those of women
- comparisons between Britain and the rest of Europe
- a comparison of the brain to a computer (= showing what is similar)
- It is difficult to make a comparison with her previous book—they are completely different.
- You can draw comparisons with the situation in Ireland (= say how the two situations are similar).
- This chart provides a comparison of the ways that teenage boys and girls in the UK spend their free time.
- In many cases, the results for boys and girls are virtually the same/identical.
- In many cases, the results for boys are virtually the same as/identical to the results for girls.
- Both boys and girls spend the bulk of their free time with friends.
- Most of the boys do more than two hours of sport a week, as do many of the girls.
- Like many of the girls, most of the boys spend a large part of their free time using the Internet.
- The girls particularly enjoy using social networking websites. Similarly, nearly all the boys said they spent at least two to three hours a week on these sites.
- used especially at the beginning of a sentence when the next thing that is mentioned is compared with something in the previous sentence
- By comparison, expenditure on education increased last year.
- His problems seemed trivial by comparison.
- when compared with somebody/something
- The second half of the game was dull by comparison with the first.
- The tallest buildings in London are small in comparison with New York's skyscrapers.
- to seem less important when compared with something else
- Last year's riots pale in comparison with this latest outburst of violence.
- Our problems pale into insignificance when compared to theirs.
- used to emphasize the difference between two people or things that are being compared
- In terms of price there's no comparison (= one thing is much more expensive than the other).
Extra Examples- Jane is still quite young, and Fiona seems old by comparison.
- Let’s put them side by side for comparison.
- Our problems don’t bear comparison with those elsewhere.
- The glasses are small in comparison with the old ones.
- The similarity between the two invites comparison.
- a comparison between figures for last year and this year
- a comparison of unemployment rates over the past 15 years
- a comparison with other schools
- a price-comparison site
- to provide a basis for comparison
- He made comparisons between Britain and the rest of Europe.
- I enclose the two plans for comparison.
- The education system bears no comparison with that in many Central European countries.
- The tallest buildings in London are small in comparison with New York’s skyscrapers.
- You can draw comparisons with the situation in Australia.
- a comparison of the brain to a computer
Word Origin- Middle English: from Old French comparesoun, from Latin comparatio(n-), from comparare ‘to pair, match’, from compar ‘like, equal’, from com- ‘with’ + par ‘equal’.
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